The Jazz Guitar Chord Dictionary
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  1. #301

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    Here goes!


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    The Jazz Guitar Chord Dictionary
     
  3. #302

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    Oops miscounted. Did 12 instead

  4. #303

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    Quote Originally Posted by jazznylon
    Oops miscounted. Did 12 instead
    What's in that fish tank? Is it guppies? I have an endler colony going and they're so fun.

  5. #304

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    Quote Originally Posted by AllanAllen
    What's in that fish tank? Is it guppies? I have an endler colony going and they're so fun.
    Yes My Dad tends to them. We have 2 fish tanks one for babies and one for adults

  6. #305

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    I did that at first, but I quickly had too many fish. Now they live together.

  7. #306

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    Quote Originally Posted by jazznylon
    Here goes!

    Nice job, you've done some work. Good of you to post. Would you be open to some well-intentioned advice?

  8. #307

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    Bumping mm 1-16 up to 180. Also, I really enjoy playing this old Aria Pro II PE180, aka "Poor Man's L5ces" or at least, the less-affluent man's L5. Recorded direct from the Fender Tone Master Twin with the Hal Leonard backing track.

    I've switched how I finger the last bit. Actually I used to play this at about 210 and lost it, and I've been watching my old clips to remember how I eventually worked out the fingerings. I've gone downhill...

  9. #308

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    Quote Originally Posted by alpop
    Nice job, you've done some work. Good of you to post. Would you be open to some well-intentioned advice?
    Sure thing!

  10. #309

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    Quote Originally Posted by jazznylon
    Sure thing!
    Okay, cool.

    My advice would be to play from beginning to end with a consistent pulse. If you have to slow down to do so, that's fine.

    Get out the metronome and find the tempo that you can play at without losing the pulse. Do some repetitions until you can lock in, and then increase your tempo from there.

    Hope this is helpful!

    Alan

  11. #310

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    Quote Originally Posted by alpop
    Okay, cool.

    My advice would be to play from beginning to end with a consistent pulse. If you have to slow down to do so, that's fine.

    Get out the metronome and find the tempo that you can play at without losing the pulse. Do some repetitions until you can lock in, and then increase your tempo from there.

    Hope this is helpful!

    Alan
    Sounds good. Thanks for the help! I'll do it better next time

  12. #311

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    Quote Originally Posted by alpop
    Okay, cool.

    My advice would be to play from beginning to end with a consistent pulse. If you have to slow down to do so, that's fine.

    Get out the metronome and find the tempo that you can play at without losing the pulse. Do some repetitions until you can lock in, and then increase your tempo from there.

    Hope this is helpful!

    Alan
    Good advice. And maybe a quick note — the big danger when you do the really good slow practice is that you can sneak by with inconsistent fingerings in the right hand. Helps a lot to write in the picking, or in this case the right hand fingering. That way it’s consistent all the way up to tempo

  13. #312

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    Quote Originally Posted by pamosmusic
    Good advice. And maybe a quick note — the big danger when you do the really good slow practice is that you can sneak by with inconsistent fingerings in the right hand. Helps a lot to write in the picking, or in this case the right hand fingering. That way it’s consistent all the way up to tempo
    True. As one who struggles to play even moderately fast, I've learned that playing fast is a different kind of playing than playing slow. If I choose a fingering and picking pattern at, say, 140, that I can play flawlessly, it's still possible that up at 180+ it will be unplayable due to the shifts, stretches, and skips required. But of course practicing at high tempos means mistakes, and we don't want to "teach" our muscle memory mistakes. So I often push the tempo up and try to play an abbreviated figure from each measure just so I can nail the right lead-off or emphasized notes at the right point. Kind of hitting the landmarks at a fast tempo, then slowing down to learn the whole. But if the goal is playing fast, the old idea of playing slow and just increasing a little has limitations if you have fingered the thing and set up your picking style for slow playing.

  14. #313

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    Thinking more about playing slow and fast and how they are not just a matter of higher metronome settings. Something you can play slowly that are very hard to ever play fast. Playing fast requires its own techniques and efficiencies.

  15. #314

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    Weirdly enough in my case I find it really difficult to throw in a lot of slurs at higher tempos rather than mostly just fingerpicking. It can get pretty confusing having to mix the two things often

  16. #315

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    That’s a thing too. It’s always a balance between efficiency and consistency. Sometimes it might be more efficient to throw an a finger in or to slur or something, but as tempos get faster, it can feel like taking two steps in a row with your left foot.

  17. #316

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    Has anyone been experimenting with simply landing the guide tones and main chord tones for the changes? I get really paralyzed thinking about soloing over a tune like this, so I've been just playing over the changes trying to hit the guide tones, passing tones, and arpeggio fragments just to learn to negotiate the changes. Strangely enough after a bit of that, I find coming back to play the head is actually easier.

  18. #317

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    Absolutely. Playing an arp solo or running the arps is the best way to get the changes in your ear and hands for linear regardless of the tune.

  19. #318

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    I'm struggling to put all the pieces together and keep tempo. It's like playing 4 different songs back to back right now.

  20. #319

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    Quote Originally Posted by lawson-stone
    Has anyone been experimenting with simply landing the guide tones and main chord tones for the changes? I get really paralyzed thinking about soloing over a tune like this, so I've been just playing over the changes trying to hit the guide tones, passing tones, and arpeggio fragments just to learn to negotiate the changes.
    Yes, an approach I've found that is effective: (1) Play the appropriate scales for the chord progressions in the tune - that's progressions, as in II-V-I, not a scale per chord approach. (2) Play arpeggios of the chords, and (3) Connect your scales and/or arpeggios with notes a half or whole step away.

    Examples:

    Arpeggios: Dm7: D-F-A-C -- G7: B-D-G-F -- CMaj.7: E-G C-B - etc.

    Scales (with a few passing notes): (Dm7) D-F-Eb-E -- (G7) G-F-A-Ab -- (C^7) G-B-D-C - etc.

    "I'm struggling to put all the pieces together and keep tempo. It's like playing 4 different songs back to back right now."

    This is precisely why one should practice playing a piece from beginning to end without stopping, ignoring mistakes made along the way. It's not only good practice for sight-reading a piece, as was mentioned in another thread, but for playing it, period.

    This is how classical music performers I've known are taught to practice a piece. Then they'll go back and work on their weak sections later.

  21. #320

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    This is a great one to run an exercise my old teacher would make me do (that drove me fucking nuts, so you know it's good)

    Start this tune from random spots that are not the beginning or end of phrases and see if you can get all the way through. So like, start at bar 6 , and then keep going.

    It actually helps unify things in the end...

  22. #321

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    Here's an attempt just to located guide-tones, passing tones, chord-tones that might thread through the changes and be the framework for improvisation. The rhythm is pretty monotonous, and I keep to one position. 3 passes through mm. 1-16, a lot of similar ideas. Those at my very middling level of proficiency might find it helpful, more advanced players, not so much!

  23. #322

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    Quote Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
    Start this tune from random spots that are not the beginning or end of phrases and see if you can get all the way through
    At this point, expect pamosmusic/Peter to chip in: "play it backwards."

  24. #323

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick-7
    Yes, an approach I've found that is effective: (1) Play the appropriate scales for the chord progressions in the tune - that's progressions, as in II-V-I, not a scale per chord approach. (2) Play arpeggios of the chords, and (3) Connect your scales and/or arpeggios with notes a half or whole step away.

    Examples:

    Arpeggios: Dm7: D-F-A-C -- G7: B-D-G-F -- CMaj.7: E-G C-B - etc.

    Scales (with a few passing notes): (Dm7) D-F-Eb-E -- (G7) G-F-A-Ab -- (C^7) G-B-D-C - etc.

    "I'm struggling to put all the pieces together and keep tempo. It's like playing 4 different songs back to back right now."

    This is precisely why one should practice playing a piece from beginning to end without stopping, ignoring mistakes made along the way. It's not only good practice for sight-reading a piece, as was mentioned in another thread, but for playing it, period.

    This is how classical music performers I've known are taught to practice a piece. Then they'll go back and work on their weak sections later.
    Why don't you post a demo clip showing us how you actually do al this over the changes of Donna Lee? Everybody knows this stuff, but it's the doing of it that hangs up a lot of people, including me. So maybe stop telling and start showing?

  25. #324

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    Quote Originally Posted by lawson-stone
    Why don't you post a demo clip showing us how you actually do al this over the changes of Donna Lee? Everybody knows this stuff, but it's the doing of it that hangs up a lot of people, including me. So maybe stop telling and start showing?
    o.k., working on getting my recorder functional - just got the right smart media card for it.

    "Everybody knows this stuff, but it's the doing of it that hangs up a lot of people, including me."


    I would disagree, if you "know" it, you can play it. If you can't play it, you don't really know it.

  26. #325

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    Quote Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
    This is a great one to run an exercise my old teacher would make me do (that drove me fucking nuts, so you know it's good)

    Start this tune from random spots that are not the beginning or end of phrases and see if you can get all the way through. So like, start at bar 6 , and then keep going.

    It actually helps unify things in the end...
    Yeah ... another one that really helps is to practice overlapping phrases. Like instead of 1-4, 5-8, etc. You work on 1-6, 5-10, etc. So you're kind of working on making the joints between phrases strong.